this run on xubuntu i think. when i first switched to mint (xfce) a few years back i'd reinstall every month or so because i broke something, yes with enough misguided tinkering linux mint can be broken. then i'd spend a week-month on other distros, mx linux, peppermint, all the ubuntus, then manjaro that got me on to minimal installs, then arch btw, then endeavour, with my own awesome or openbox config. i thought i'd settled down for 6 months or so, but the threat of a bad package was always there (even though it never happened). when i got my latest laptop i installed mint again, with my openbox config. after a while i started noticing things weren't running quite right, so i just thought "instead of changing everything, just change what i need to" and went with xub for slightly more up to date repos. turns out i can get pretty much all the functionality i had with openbox out of xfce. so i've managed to stay on one install for about 18 months!
reallychris
one that might play better in northern england for me - an ironic "let's 'av it". not the full on "LET'S 'AV ITTTTTTTTTTT woo" just a dead pan 'right, let's 'av it, eh?'
manjaro was my way in to arch. i used the fully configured xfce version, then several versions of the minimal install until i got something i liked, and didn't break after a couple of weeks.
if you were to ask me for a recommendation on an arch based distro i'd say endeavour, but manjaro is perfectly fine.
ahh thanks, i was wondering just how "minimal" minimal was. i was expecting something like endeavour - a configured OS but around 1500 packages. so i really appreciate that warning haha. ok better start making my list.
i hopped from arch/wm to xub too. tbh everything i learned from setting up awesome, qtile, open box etc helped me get really into the functionality of xfwm and make it really work for me. it's a little sluggish, but only compared to a completely bare bones wm. the distro hopping phase was a valuable learning experience, but i think this is a perfectly fine place to settle down.
i've been curious about the minimal edition. now that i've found replacements and workarounds in the ubuntu repos, i've been wanted to do a fresh install with that. i've got ~3100 packages just from trying stuff out and forgetting to uninstall it haha.
yeah that one annoyed me especially as the only reason netflix ever made money was because they won the war of convenience against torrent sites.
my expectations weren't very high, given how the twitter exodus played out, seeing some of the people who made very bold statements about never coming back... coming back... and subscribing to twitter blue.
you're never going to take down a giant like reddit, or twitter, or facebook, or whatever, in one swift blow. they're probably going to get through this. and your average social media user doesn't want to bring down the status quo, they just want to look at funny pictures of dogs. and that's fine. the real victory to be had is showing people that things can be done differently. enough people will stay on fedi servers to keep a community going, and by the time the next bunch of disgruntled posters come along there will be more content to keep them engaged
always nice to see peppermint rices. very underrated distro imo.
ahh cool i might go for the +/- to dial it in rather than setting it to an absolute value. i really wish they'd standardise the web so one solution would work over many different website colour schemes ha.
ah, this is mostly from my gtk theme, but now that i just remembered i did do a little bit of tinkering. i can't remember if there was anything else i needed to do, but i know that i needed to save this to .config/gtk-3.0/gtk.css. this gives the rounded edges, and corrects the foreground/background colours. i can't remember what it looked like originally but very few gtk themes actually matched well with the bar.
.xfce4-panel widget grid button.flat.toggle:checked
{
color: black;
border-radius: 10px;
}
.xfce4-panel widget grid button.flat.toggle:hover
{
color: black;
background-color: lightgrey;
border-radius: 10px;
}
.xfce4-panel .tasklist .toggle:checked
{
color: black;
border-radius: 10px;
}
.xfce4-panel .tasklist .toggle:hover
{
color: black;
background-color: lightgrey;
border-radius: 10px;
}
just the standard xfce one
loosely based, but skeptics with a k. two of the hosts have autism and i loved the show before, but they really helped me make sense of my own head and sort of gave me a direction to work in. the show is interesting, they're a good bunch, the sound levels are rarely short of perfect and the episode descriptions are very helpful for cherry picking. there's maybe two episodes where they spend a lot of time on their own autism, but it does come up regularly.
EDIT: https://www.merseysideskeptics.org.uk/podcasts/skeptics-with-a-k